Reviews for
GMCD 7173 - Marcel Dupré Vol. 6
COMPLETE ORGAN WORKS
The American Organist - June 2001
Marcel Dupré: The Complete Organ Works, Vol. 6
Jeremy Filsell plays at St. Boniface Episcopal Church, Sarasota, Fla. (1979 Moller,
III/60).
Guild CD 7173 (DDD); 51:05 - Produced by Adrian Peacock
(Eight Gregorian Preludes, op. 45; Méditation, WoO; Six Antiennes pour le temps
de Noël, op. 48; Two Chorales, op. 39; Deuxième Symphonie, op. 26.)
Use of an unimposing Moller organ in an uncelebrated American church might seem
an ill-advised choice for a project as important as this. But remember that Dupré spent
many months over the course of four decades playing in the United States on typically
American instruments (which, for the most part, he savored). Thanks to recent tonal
ministrations by Jonathan Ambrosino and Jeffrey Weiler, this organ, while obviously not
French, nonetheless does the entire Dupré canon full justice. And, as it turns out, in
Op. 45 we again find Dupré responding to an American publishers desire for
"accessible music," presumably for American organists to play on their American
organs. These movements, in a conservative, mode-base style on two staves with pedal ad
libitum, are approachable, though by no means completely devoid of technical challenges.
The last, Verbum Supernum, which might take some of us weeks or months to master,
is two minutes of brilliant figurations, but that effort would be worth the thrill of
accomplishment. Easier on the fingers is the Méditation from 1966, another
American commission, from Enid and Henry Woodward of Carleton College for their Library
of Organ Music. This piece, too, is accessible to the "amateur player" who,
at least as Dupré may have imagined the situation, must be a person for whom music is an
affair of the heart. The subtle poetry of these uncomplicated measures responds best to a
caring hand. Throughout it all, Filsell is never at a loss, for insight or ability. Opus
48, another collection of chant-based works, this time for the Christmas season, is
neither so vividly agreeable as the popular Variations sur un Noël nor so
liturgically inevitable as the grand Vespers sequence of Op. 18. Yet what a wonderful
progression from the almost naïve assurance of the Lords arrival (Ecce Dominus
veniet), and the awe upon contemplation of His almighty word (Omipotens sermo tuus),
to the unexpected serenity of the antiphon for Christmas Day, the effervescence of
Jesses flowering root, the solemn procession of the Magi and their gifts in a
six-part ricercare, and the luminous revelation of the concluding toccata for the Feast of
the Purification. Often lost in the bustle of more imposing projects, the pair of chorale
preludes, Op. 59, should be on every students list of things to do. They provide a
quiet interlude before the last item here, which is the last of Duprés three famous
symphonic works from the 1920s, "ferocious and disturbing" music, and for that
all the more exciting. As Filsell was preparing for his landmark recital and recording
project, other forces were at work assembling a multi-performer assault at the Dupré
fortress, and recently Dutchman Ben van Oosten, has thrown his hat into Duprés ring, too.
For so long there was so little and now a surfeit of riches. But Filsell was the first to
do it all, and to my ears he provides the standard to match. His is an achievement to
applaud heartily, as one should also acknowledge the sponsorship of Rolls-Royce, whose
resumed role in this part of the Dupré story has a delicious aptness and logic. And bravo
to Guild Recordings for putting it all together.
Organists Review - May 2001
Dupré Complete Organ Works
played by Jeremy Filsell on the organ of St Boniface Episcopal Church, Sarasota,
Florida
Volume Six
Eight Gregorian Preludes op 45; Méditation WoO; Six Antiennes pour le Temps de Noël op
48; Deux Chorales op 59; 2me Symphonie op 26
Recorded September 1998; TT 5105.
GUILD GMCD 7173
Volume Seven
Variations sur 'Il est neé le divin enfant' WoO; Élévation op 2; Scherzo op 16;
Élévation op 32; Sept Pièces op 27
Recorded September 1998; TT 5638.
GUILD GMCD 7180
The more one listens to and seeks to understand the organ music of Dupré the more one
is drawn into a transcendent spiritual world; his technical skill is superbly assured, yet
he is also alert to perceptions of the heart and soul. His music is not sentimental .Thus
this distinctive, idiomatic and excellent repertoire is recognised as great art.
Dupré spent the whole of his life devoted to the organ, giving 2178 recitals all over
the world. His music is not easy listening; but should not stamina be expected of the
listener as it is of the composer, the organ-builder, the performer? The effort will be
richly repaid. It is not music for the faint-hearted, but Jeremy Filsell, who, it should
be noted, is also an accomplished solo pianist, has lived with, loved and performed
Dupré's music for many years. He helps us by contrasting large-scale concert works,
plainsong- based liturgical music, and technical studies.
The Gregorian Preludes inhabit an archaic simplicity in rarely more than three
or four voices; they are atmospheric like the Antiennes, quietly meditative and
gently understated; yet there is variety. The Chorales are also devotional. The
substantial and wonderful 2me Symphonie verges on the atonal and rejoices in its
virtuosity, but behind the dazzle lie sinister undercurrents that disturb and thrill. The
well-known melody Il est né provides an Offertory for Midnight Mass. Its
simplicity contrasts with Dupré's sophisticated variations. How marvellous it would be to
hear the Élévations and so much of this repertoire in a liturgically appropriate
context. How superbly the Scherzo recalls the spirit of Dupré's sensational
improvisations at Notre Dame. Each movement of the Sept Pièces is dedicated to a
musical friend or colleague: Souvenir expresses nostalgia, Marche, pomp, Pastorale,
colour, Carillon incorporates ostinato into a toccata, Canon is a
tour-de-force, Légende is hypnotic, and Final is tempestuous.
These recordings seem to me to be almost ideal. Filsells technique and
understanding are virtually faultless. The Möller instrument of 1979 is both impressive
and clear, although sometimes hard-edged, the acoustic almost cavernous enough. The highly
informative notes by David Gammie are exceptionally well-researched.
Not many can aspire to the technical wizardry to perform most of this important
repertoire. We must be grateful that these recordings give us insight into the poetical
and spiritual qualities, as well as the sensational virtuosity and supreme intellectual
achievements of one of the twentieth centurys greatest composers for the organ.
Michael Overbury
American Record Guide May/June 00 Page 115
DUPRE. 8 Gregorian Preludes; Meditation; 2 Chorales; 6 Anthems for Christmastime;
Symphony2
Jeremy Filsell, organ Guild 7173 (Qualiton) 51 minutes
Filsell continues his plan to record Dupré's complete organ works with this sixth
instalment. As before, his programs purposely mix seldom heard pieces with some better
known. The idea is a good one, though sometimes the program is quite short (51 minutes
isn't a bar- gain). The 8 Gregorian Preludes from 1948 reveal Dupr6 in his most direct,
most succinct style (13 minutes for all 8). Done to comply with the publisher's request
for "accessible" music, these are delightful miniatures perfect on their own or
as preludes to fuller treatments of such familiar themes as 'Salve Regina', 'Pange
Lingua', and 'Aima Redemptoris'. Filsell offers straightforward interpretations without
fuss or mannerism. Meditation is a 1966 beauty without opus number. Again in a
style for amateur organists, this gentle and quiet musing is an ideal communion or prayer
accompaniment (Schmitt, Hall & McCreary). Brevity characterises the Chorales as well
(3 minutes total). These are very similar to the Orgelbüchlein settings, the first
with the theme in the Pedal, the second with it in a manual Flute stop.
The Anthems for Christmastime from 1952 offer appropriale chant settings for a span
ftom the first Sunday in Advent to the Purifica- tion. The arrangements vary from simple
theme-over-accompaniment to six-part tex- ture to a concluding toccata. Filsell performs
accurately and with feeling.
Without doubt, the Symphony 2 is the most challenging work on this program. 11 is the
last of the three "symphonies" from the 1920s (Pas- sion Symphony, 1924;
Symphony in G minor for Organ and Orchestra, 1927) and was pre- miered by Dupre in New
York on September 30, 1929. Murray mentions the "flerce dissonance" of the work,
a completely accurate observation. The harmonic language transcends what had been heard in
Dupr@'s music to that point. Acidic, bitter, angry-all better describe this than what the
liner notes consider "exciting". The edgy opening rnovement posits three themes
for tutli, flutes, then strings; moments of relaxation are few, and the hard-edged first
theme continues to permeate the fabric right to the end. While the formal aspects are
percepti- ble, they are far less prominent than the sheer visceral wallop of this first
movement. The brief 11 is in theme-and-variation form. Halting rhythms and unusual tone
colours characterise this middle section. Again, one seeks a memo- rable tune to hang
onto. The concluding Toccata is introduced by a long string of staccato open chords,
giving way to a sombre quiet section with the bass clarinet stop. Suddenly the opening
toccata reappears in more insistent fashion. Filsell manages admirable articulation,
making the often dense polyphony more transparent. This is a difficult work for both per-
former and listener. In pieces like düs, the rela- tive clarity of the organ in St
Boniface (Sarasota) helps a great deal. Nonetheless, for listeners who prefer the
resonance and reverberation of larger cathedral installations, there are two discs worth
comparing: Mathieu at the Cavad- ld-Coll in St Antoine des Quinze-Vingt, Paris (ADDA
581278) is excellent Scott at Lon on s St Paul (Hyperion 67047) fights the good fight with
an immense echo in competitive tempos. The echo blurs lots of detail, but the effect is
thrilling. Filsell gets the nod for a fine overall performance.
METZ
International Record Review April 2000
Dupré
Complete Organ Works, Volume 6. Eight Gregorian Preludes, Op. 45. Méditation. Six
Antiennes pour le temps de Noël, Op. 48. Deux Chorales, Op. 59. Symphony No. 2 in C sharp
minor, Op. 26.
Jeremy Filsell (organ).
Guild GMCD7173 (full price, 51 minutes). Recorded on the organ of St Boniface Episcopal
Church, Sarasota, Florida. Producer Adrian Peacock. Engineer Ken Blair. Date
September 1998.
Dupré
Complete Organ Works, Volume 7. Six Variations sur Il est né le divin enfant'.
Elévation, Op. 2. Scherzo, Op. 16. Trois Elévations, Op. 32. Sept Pièces, Op. 27.
Jeremy Filsell (organ).
Guild GMCD 7180 (full price, 57 minutes). Recorded
on the organ of St Boniface Episcopal Church, Sarasota, Florida. Producer Adrian
Peacock. Engineer Ken Blair. Date September 1998.
Comparisons:
Symphony No. 2:
Scott (Hyperion) CDA67047 Trotter (Decca) 452 478-2
Jeremy Filsell has now reached the mid-point of his heroic single-handed traversal of
Dupré's complete organ music for Guild (an ongoing rival series on Naxos is shared
between half-a-dozen players). Filsell - one of those rare keyboard players with equal
facility on both organ and piano - has been a devotee of Dupré's music since his school-
days, and has every musical gift needed to do justice to the composer's varied demands. He
is alive to each nuance of tone and texture, although in the shorter pieces his basic
pulse can be rather free, sometimes unsettlingly so. His articulation is very clear, even
spiky (the Marche from Sept Piéces for example), and thus rather more 'modern'
than Dupré's own recordings from the 1920s and 1930s: Dupré gave us Romantic Bach, but
Filsell counters with Baroque Dupré! Both discs were recorded on the Möller organ of St
Boniface Episcopal Church at Sarasota in Florida. This may seem an unusual choice of
instrument when there is such a wealth of suitable authentic French organs to hand just
across the Channel, but this 62-stop organ has a specification very much in the French
manner and boasts an enormous pedal department. It is well equipped and powerful in tone
but not especially characterful, an instrument to be impressed by rather than warm to. The
church acoustic is clear and not very resonant, and some listeners may regret the lack of
cathedral-like mystery in this repertoire.
The principal work on Volume 6 is the Second Symphony, the remainder of the disc
consisting of short works or sets of short works averaging a couple of minutes in length.
Dupré was a legendary improviser, and many of the slighter works here sound much like
notated improvisations. The Eight Gregorian Preludes, Op. 45, that open the recital are
appealing and deliberately accessible miniatures on Gregorian themes, attractively
registered by Filsell using the St Boniface reeds, tremulant and chimes. The Six
Antiennes, Op. 48, are more modern in style, although they, too, are plainchant-based;
while the chorales 'Freu dich sehr, O meine Seele' and 'Liebster lmmanuel' from Op. 59
sound almost like satires on Bach, emphasized by Filsell's cheeky registration. The Second
Symphony is on a completely different scale, a dark-toned work with a wild, improvisatory
feel to it. The central Intermezzo, a theme and variations, includes some extraordinary
textures, while the concluding Toccata in C sharp is like a demonic march à la
Prokofiev. Filsell handles the technical and musical demands with aplomb - this is a
performance that demands to be heard. The Second Symphony has fared well on disc in recent
years, and the recordings by Thomas Trotter and John Scott, too, are superb.
The seventh disc has slightly less of a claim on the collector's purse, including as it
does only shorter compositions. The Sept Pièces of 1930 are an extended set of
concert works dedicated to Dupré's friends, including the organ builders Henry Willis and
Ernest Skinner, the organist Lynnwood Farnham and the Bach scholar Albert Reimenschneider
(the tumultuous Final dedicated to the latter includes the BACH motif worked into the
texture). The Canon - at the seventh - and the Carillon from this set are also impressive.
Of the other works on Volume 7, the most important is the toccata-like Scherzo, a
semiquaver moto perpetuo demonstrating Filsell's impressive prestidigitation;
Dupré wrote this at the time he was deputizing at Notre Dame for the ailing Vierne.
Ken Blair's recording is absolutely first- rate, capturing all the range, power and
colour of this fine organ, even if distracting stop clunks in several of the works might
have been edited out. David Gammie's booklet notes are detailed and informative, a model
of their kind. This series, a landmark in the recorded organ literature, is scheduled to
stretch to 12 discs, but at only 51 and 57 minutes in length, respectively, these two
really are unacceptably short; surely Guild didn't need to spread its wares so thinly.
Francis Knights
CLASSIC CD MAY 2000
Deux Chorales, Op. 59 (1963); Deuxième Symphonie, Op. 26 (1929)
Jeremy Filsell (organ)
Guild GMCD 7173 51:05 DDD
Now half-way in his Dupré series, Jeremy Filsell gradually appears to be doing for
this under-rated composer what Jennifer Bate did for his pupil Messiaen in her celebrated
Unicorn-Kanchana recordings.
The main work here is the Second Symphony, a terse and bluntly spoken piece, and
certainly one of Duprés darker creations. Filsell displays his by now trademark
mastery of Duprés characteristically stabbing staccato rhythms in the strutting
Toccata conclusion, and the quickness of his musical reflexes is evident in the seamless
switches to rapid flute figurations after the snorting opening of the Preludio.
There is slower music in two collections of shorter pieces (try the lovely cornet solo
in Alma Redemptoris Mater), and a couple of typically fresh, astringent
chorale preludes. Notes, sound, playing and packaging are again of superior quality. For a
quick fix of Filsell fireworkery, try Lumen and Revelationem. Brilliant!
Terry Blain
Performance 4 stars
Sound -- 5 ear-phones
Verdict: Well up to the standards of previous volumes in
this definitive series
Page revised 01.08.2001
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